Basic Marketing, 16e

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Transcript Basic Marketing, 16e

Chapter 5
Electronic Commerce:
Strategies for the New
Economy
STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES
1. Define and describe the major ecommerce business models.
2. Identify the differences and similarities
among customers and their perception of
value in B2B and B2C e-commerce.
3. Compare and contrast developing a
marketing mix in B2B and B2C ecommerce.
STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES
4. Summarize ways of moving money in ecommerce and related issues.
5. Discuss major trends that are impacting both
the e-commerce world and society in
general.
ADVERTISING $$$$
GO WHERE THE EYES ARE
ADVERTISING $$$$
GO WHERE THE EYES ARE
• Some observations from the previous slide
• The Internet
– Adults spend 29% of their time there
– Advertisers spend only 8% of $$ there
• Newspaper
– Adults spend only 8% of their time there
– Advertisers spend 20% of $$ there
ADVERTISING $$$$
GO WHERE THE EYES ARE
1. Ratio of your time spent on TV versus the
Internet?
2. What do you do during commercials –
channel surf, get something to eat,
something else?
3. What’s going to happen to newspaper
advertising revenue?
INTRODUCTION
• E-commerce is changing everything
• Electronic commerce (e-commerce) –
commerce, but it is commerce accelerated
and enhanced by IT
– Build powerful relationships with customers
– Build powerful relationships with suppliers
– Build powerful relationships with partners
INTRODUCTION
• But e-commerce is still commerce
• You must have a clear path-to-profitability
(P2P), a formal business plan that outlines
key business issues such as…
–
–
–
–
Customer targets
Marketing strategies
Operations strategies
Projected income statement and balance sheet
targets`
E-COMMERCE BUSINESS MODELS
B2G E-Commerce
• Business to Government (B2G) ecommerce – when a business sells
products and services to a government
entity.
– Lockheed providing products and services
to DoD
– Fairly large e-commerce model in terms of
revenue
C2G E-Commerce
• Consumer to Government (C2G) ecommerce – when an individual sells
products and services to a government
entity
– You selling something to the government
– This market is quite small and unremarkable
G2B E-Commerce
• Government to Business (G2B) e-commerce
– when a government entity sells products
and services to businesses
– SBA providing surety guarantees, disaster
assistance, ombudsmen, etc to small businesses
– TSA holding auctions and selling off confiscated
items (most times, you must be a “business” to
participate in these auctions)
G2C E-Commerce
• Government to Consumer (G2C) ecommerce – e-commerce activities
performed between a government and
its citizens
– Does not fit well at all within the traditional
supply-and-demand e-commerce notion
– Paying taxes, registering vehicles, etc
G2G E-Commerce
• Government to Government (G2G) ecommerce – e-commerce activities
within a nation’s government (can also
refer to e-commerce activities between
2 or more nations’ governments)
B2B E-Commerce
• Business to Business (B2B) e-commerce
– when a business sells products and
services to customers who are primarily
other businesses
– Where all the e-commerce money is
– Basically, it’s about businesses doing
business with other businesses
– Supply chain management (from Chapter 2)
is a big part of B2B e-commerce
B2C E-Commerce
• Business to Consumer (B2C) e-commerce –
when a business sells products and services to
customers who are primarily individuals
– B2C is the glitzy e-commerce like iTunes, eBay, etc
– B2C is a primary focus of the later sections in this
chapter
C2B E-Commerce
• Consumer to Business (C2B) ecommerce – when an individual sells
products and services to a business
– True economic inversion of the B2C model
– Fotolia is a good example (www.fotolia.com)
– You can also advertise businesses on your personal
Web site (called an affiliate program) and receive
monies for visitors who jump from your site to the
business’ Web sites
C2C E-Commerce
• Consumer to Consumer (C2C) e-commerce –
when an individual sells products and services
to another individual.
– You selling to another person (or the reverse)
– Usually occurs through an intermediary such as
eBay
UNDERSTAND YOUR BUSINESS, PRODUCTS,
SERVICES, & CUSTOMERS
• To be successful, you must…
– Define your products and services
– Define your target customers
• B2B (other businesses)
• B2C (individuals)
– Define your customers perception of the
value of your products and services
Who Are Your Customers?
• Business to Business
– Other businesses
• Business to Consumer
– Individuals
• Each is different and has different needs
and wants
Customer Product and Service Value Perception
B2C: Convenience Versus Specialty
• Convenience
– Lower priced
– Purchased frequently
– Example: common food items
• Specialty
– Higher priced
– Purchased less frequently
– Example: Stereos, computers
B2C: Commoditylike and Digital
• Commoditylike
– Same no matter where you purchase it
– Examples: books, music, movies
– Price and ease of ordering are important
• Digital
– Purchased and delivered over the Internet
– Best product type for B2C e-commerce
– Examples: Music, software
B2C: Mass Customization
• Mass customization –giving customers the
opportunity to tailor your products or services
– Dell – customized computer purchases
– Apple iTunes – only the music you want (not
necessarily the whole album)
B2B: MRO Versus Direct
• Maintenance, repair, and operations
(MRO) materials (indirect materials) –
materials necessary for running a
company but not directly related to the
company’s primary business activities
– Similar to convenience items in B2C
– Office supplies, repair parts, lubricating oils
MRO Materials
• Buyers in B2B make large purchases
• Can then demand a discount (not true in
B2C)
• Can team up with other buyers to create
demand aggregation
• Demand aggregation – combining
purchase requests from multiple buyers
which justifies a larger discount
Direct Materials
• Direct materials – materials used in
production in a manufacturing company
or are placed on the shelf for sale in
retail businesses
– Relate directly to a company’s primary
business activities
– Quality, quantity, and delivery timing are
important
Direct Materials
• Buyers can participate in reverse auctions for
direct materials
• Reverse auction
– buyers post interests in buying items
– sellers compete by submitting successively lower
bids
– lowest bidder at close makes the sale
B2B: Horizontal Versus Vertical
• B2B e-commerce takes advantage of emarketplaces
• Electronic marketplace (e-marketplace) –
interactive business providing a central
market where multiple buyers and sellers can
engage in e-commerce
– Horizontal e-marketplaces
– Vertical e-marketplaces
E-Marketplaces
Electronic Marketplaces
• Horizontal e-marketplace – connects buyers and
sellers across many industries
– Primarily for MRO materials
– All industries need office supplies, travel, etc.
• Vertical e-marketplace – connects buyers and
sellers in a given industry
– Primarily for direct materials related to product
– Each industry has unique direct material needs
– Ex: Covisint (www.covisint.com) – automotive
To Summarize
• B2C
– Varying demographics and lifestyles
– Convenience versus specialty products
– Commoditylike and digital work best of all
– Mass customization necessary in some
instances
To Summarize
• B2B
– MRO versus direct materials
– Demand aggregation is present
– E-marketplaces are vitally important
• Horizontal (MRO materials mainly)
• Vertical (direct materials mainly)
FIND CUSTOMERS AND ESTABLISH
RELATIONSHIPS
•
•
•
•
You must first find customers
Then establish relationships
Otherwise, you can’t make a sale
B2C and B2B techniques are very
different
Business to Consumer
• Need to determine your marketing mix
• Marketing mix – set of marketing tools
your organization will use to pursue its
marketing objectives in reaching and
attracting potential customers
– There are many such tools for B2C
B2C Marketing Mix Tools
•
•
•
•
•
Registering with search engines
Online ads
Viral marketing
Affiliate programs
Social networking
Registering with Search Engines
• Some search engines will list your site for free
• Some charge a fee
• For an additional fee, your site can appear at
top of a search list (every time)
Online Ads
• Online ads (banner ads) – small
advertisements that appear on other sites
• Two variations are:
– Pop-up ad – small Web page advertisement that
appears on your screen outside the current Web
site
– Pop-under ad – pop-up ad you do not see until
you close your current browser window
Online Ads
Banner ad
for a stock
brokerage
firm
Viral Marketing
• Viral marketing – encourages users of a
product or service supplied by a B2C business
to encourage friends to join in as well
– Blue Mountain Arts (www.bluemountain.com)
– Send a card
– Card has link so the other person can send you a
card back
Affiliate Programs
• Affiliate program – arrangement between
two e-commerce sites that directs viewers
from one site to another
– If viewers buy at the second site, the second site
pays a small fee to the first site
– Usually a percentage of the sale
Affiliate Programs
• Click-throughs and conversion rates are
important
• Click-through – count of the number of
people who visit one site and use an ad
to get to another
• Conversion rate – percentage of
potential customers who actually buy
something
Affiliate Programs
Social Network Marketing
Social Media:
Effectiveness of in Marketing
Actions taken by visitors transferring from Facebook / Google
Activity
Facebook
Google
Views at least one product page
73 %
56 %
Bounces from first page
46 %
26%
Adds items to cart
3.09 %
7.22 %
Converts
0.49 %
2.44 %
Source: Monetate - 2011
Business to Business Marketing
• Much more personal
• Not usually done with generic ads designed for
mass distribution
• Often take place in e-marketplace
• Once a contact is made, the relationship must be
established
• This often requires face-to-face meetings
• Must also integrate the IT systems to the supplier
business and customer business
To Summarize
• B2C
– Marketing mix drives customers to Web site
– Search engines, online ads, viral marketing, and
affiliate programs
– Focus on conversion rates to measure success
To Summarize
• B2B
– Frequently occurs in an e-marketplace
– Requires establishing formal business
relationship
– Requires IT system integration
– Doesn’t include broad and generic marketing
mix
MOVE MONEY EASILY & SECURELY
• In e-commerce, most money moves
electronically
• Security becomes very important
B2C Payment Systems
•
•
•
•
•
Credit cards
Financial cybermediaries
Electronic checks
Electronic Bill Presentment and Payment
Smart cards
Financial Cybermediaries
• Financial cybermediary
– Internet-based company
– makes it easy for one person to pay another
person or organization over the Internet
– PayPal (www.paypal.com) is the most wellknown
Financial Cybermediaries
Electronic Checks
• Electronic check – mechanism for sending
money from your checking or savings account
to another person or organization
– Many implementations
– Most common implementation is online banking
Electronic Bill Presentment & Payment
• Electronic Bill Presentment and Payment
(EBPP)
– sending bills over the Internet
– providing an easy-to-use mechanism (perhaps a
button) to pay for them if the amount looks correct
– Available through Checkfree (www.checkfree.com)
and Quicken (www.quicken.com)
Smart Cards
• Smart card
– plastic card (the size of a credit card)
– contains an embedded chip on which digital
information can be stored and updated
– ex: debit cards
B2C Payment Systems
• Need to move money and other information such as
shipping address
• Digital wallets can help
• Digital wallet – software and information
– Software provides transaction security
– Information includes delivery information and other
forms of necessary information
– Can be…
• Client-side – you create the digital wallet - keep it on your
computer
• Server-side (also called a thin wallet) – organization creates it for
you and keeps it on its servers
B2B Payment Systems
• Business customers…
– Make large purchases
– Will not pay with credit card or financial
cybermediary
– Use financial EDI
– Pay for many purchases at once (perhaps the end
of the month)
EDI
• Electronic data interchange (EDI)
• direct computer-to-computer transfer of
transaction information
• in standard business documents, such as
invoices and purchase orders
• in a standard format
EDI
• How businesses communicate with each
other
• Used in e-marketplaces and value-added
networks (VANs) – B2B service that
offers information-sharing services
among organizations
– VANs support the sending and receiving of
purchase orders, for example
Financial EDI
• Financial EDI – an electronic process
used primarily within B2B for the
payment of purchases
– This is electronic money in B2B
– Often occurs through an automated
clearing house
Security: The Pervading Concern
• Security is very important when moving
money
• Some security measures…
– Encryption
– Secure Sockets Layers
– Secure Electronic Transactions
– Many, many others
Encryption
• Encryption – scrambles the contents of a
file so that you can’t read it without
having the right decryption key
• Often through public key encryption
(PKE) – uses two keys
– a public key for everyone
– private key for only the recipient of the
encrypted information
Public Key Encryption
Secure Sockets Layers
• Secure Sockets Layer (SSL)…
– Creates a secure connection between a
Web client and server
– Encrypts the information
– Sends the information over the Internet
• Denoted by lock icon on browser or
https:// (notice the “s”)
Secure Sockets Layers
The “s” in
https and
the padlock
Secure Electronic Transactions
• Secure Electronic Transaction (SET) –
transmission method that ensures
transactions are legitimate as well as secure
– Helps verify use of a credit card, for example, by
sending the transaction info to the credit issuer as
well as the seller/supplier
– Separates transaction information into parts
• Product / order info seen only by customer and seller
• Credit card / bank account info seen only by card bank
To Summarize
• B2C
– Credit cards, financial cybermediaries,
electronic checks, EBPP, smart cards, and
digital wallets
– Pay for individual purchases, usually in small
amounts
– Each payment must be validated
To Summarize
• B2B
– Use EDI to facilitate ordering process
– VANS can provide for EDI and financial EDI
– Use financial EDI for payment of purchases
To Summarize
• B2C and B2B – security…
– Overriding concern
– Encryption, SSLs, SET, and others
E-BUSINESS TRENDS
• “E” is certainly changing many things
• Many trends in every part of your life
• Four important ones
1.
2.
3.
4.
Long-Tail Economics
Crowdsourcing
Virtual Goods
Mobile Commerce
E-Business Trend – Long Tail
• Long Tail – first offered by Chris Anderson;
explains e-commerce profitability in terms
of a sales curve
• Brick-and-mortar businesses carry limited
inventory, inventory that is popular
• E-businesses can carry huge amounts of
“niche” inventory that may only sell a
couple of times a year
E-Business Trend – Long Tail
E-Business Trend – Long Tail
E-Business Trend - Crowdsourcing
• Crowdsourcing – businesses provide technologies
that allow people – instead of designated
employees – to create, modify, and oversee the
development of a product or service.
• Examples
– New York City’s App development contest
– Glaxo’s opening of its compound database for curing
malaria
– Social “saving the world” contests
Crowdsourcing and Goldcorp
• On the brink of going out of business
• Held a contest to see who could find gold
on 55,000-acre property
• Put up $575,000 in prize money
• Published all geological data for the
property on the Web
Crowdsourcing and Goldcorp
•
•
•
•
The result…
Thousands of entrants
Ideas yielded 8 million ounces of gold
That’s a return of $3 billion on an
investment of $575,000
Other Crowdsourcing Examples
• Netflix – gave a million $$ in prize money
to the team who could improve its
recommendation engine by 10%
• All examples of crowdsourcing value
– eBay
– Facebook
– Twitter
– YouTube
E-Business Trend – Virtual Goods
• Virtual good – nonphysical object
– Music, e-cards, toys, weapons, clothes, and
accessories you buy in online communities like
Farmville and World of Warcraft
• Purchases of virtual goods
– 2007 - $2.1 billion
– 2010 - $7.3 billion (245% increase)
– 2014 (projected) - $14 billion (100% increase)
• An individual (Jon Jacobs) sold a virtual bio
dome, mall, stadium, and club for $335,000
E-Business Trend – Virtual Goods
E-Business Trend – Mobile Commerce
• Mobile computing – using technology to
wirelessly connect to and use centrally located
information and software
• Mobile commerce – electronic commerce
transactions conducted over a wireless device
such as a smartphone, laptop, or tablet PC.
E-Business Trend – Mobile Commerce
By 2015, it is predicted that worldwide mobile
commerce will exceed $119 billion.